Human rights lawyer Anon Nampha has made several music videos poking fun at life under military rule. In this one, he and his activist friends sing about the painful experience of reading the proposed new Constitution that would see a 250-member appointed Senate oversee the elected Government.

Sunday will mark two years since Thailand's military overthrew the elected government, ending violent political protests. With the army cracking down hard on any dissent, some activists and commentators are using humour to get their message across.

A top Thai medical college has caught students using spy cameras linked to smartwatches to cheat during exams in what some social media users have compared to a plot straight out of a Mission Impossible movie.

Thailand's election commission files charges against a group for posting "foul and strong" comments online criticising a military-backed draft constitution, the first case filed under a law that prohibits campaigning on the charter.

Thailand's new year festival Songkran is known for the dramatic increase in road accidents caused by speed and alcohol, with many crash victims helped by volunteers and medics from a 100-year-old charity.